Left for Dead in a Montana Ravine, Abigail’s Blood Told the Truth-felicia

The first lie was simple enough to sell.

Abigail Hart had slipped.

That was what Preston Vale would say when the town began asking why his fiancée never made it home.

Image

He would lower his voice.

He would look down at his polished boots.

He would let people imagine grief where calculation had been standing all along.

The second lie was colder.

No one could have survived a fall like that.

It sounded reasonable in the Montana high country, where cliffs did not forgive, storms moved faster than gossip, and snow could erase a man’s tracks before breakfast.

The third lie was the one Abigail heard with her own ears.

Preston whispered it while crouched beside her in the snow, his face handsome and calm beneath the pale moon, his boot pressing down against the torn hem of her coat as if even dying did not give her the right to move away from him.

“Don’t look at me like that, Abby,” he said.

His breath showed white in the air.

He was winded from dragging her.

Not ashamed.

Not frightened.

Only tired from the work.

“You always wanted people to see you as strong,” he told her. “So be strong now.”

Abigail tried to speak, but blood filled her mouth before language could form.

One side of her face had gone numb.

Her ribs screamed each time she tried to pull in air.

Somewhere behind all that pain, she could still hear the hollow sound of the tire iron in Travis Weller’s hand.

It had not started with the ravine.

It had started with paper.

Transfer papers.

Read More